J.
Am. Ceram. Soc., 80
Fibrous
Monolithic Ceramics
Desiderio
Kovar,*,†
Bruce H. King,*,‡ Rodney
W. Trice,* and John W. Halloran*
Materials
Science and Engineering Department,
Fibrous monolithic ceramics are an example of a laminate
in which a controlled, three-dimensional structure has been introduced on a submillimeter scale. This unique structure allows this
all-ceramic material to fail in a nonbrittle manner. Materials
have been fabricated and tested with a variety of architectures. The influence
on mechanical properties at room temperature and at high temperature of the structure
of the constituent phases and the architecture in which they are arranged are
discussed. The elastic properties of these materials can be effectively
predicted using existing models. These models also can be extended to predict the
strength of fibrous monoliths with an arbitrary orientation and architecture.
However, the mechanisms that govern the energy absorption capacity of fibrous monoliths
are unique, and experimental results do not follow existing models. Energy dissipation
occurs through two dominant mechanisms—delamination
of the weak interphases and then frictional sliding
after cracking occurs. The properties of the constituent phases that maximize
energy absorption are discussed.